Hacking Expert David Chalk Joins Urgent Call to Halt Smart Grid

VANCOUVER, British Columbia--(BUSINESS WIRE)--The vulnerability of the energy industry's new wireless smart grid will
inevitably lead to lights out for everyone, according to leading cyber
expert David Chalk. In an online interview for an upcoming documentary
film entitled 'Take Back Your Power' (www.ThePowerFilm.org),
Chalk says the entire power grid will be at risk to being taken down by
cyber attack, and if installations continue it's only a matter of time.

“We're in a state of crisis,” said Chalk. “The front door is open and
there is no lock to be had. There is not a power meter or device on the
grid that is protected from hacking - if not already infected - with
some sort of trojan horse that can cause the grid to be shut down or
completely annihilated.”

“One of the most amazing things that has happened to mankind in the last
100 years is the Internet. It's given us possibility beyond our wildest
imagination. But we also know the vulnerabilities that exist inside of
it. And then we have the backbone, the power grid that powers our
nations. Those two are coming together. And it's the smart meter on your
home or business that's now allowing that connectivity.”

Chalk also issued a challenge to governments, media and technology
producers to show him one piece of digital technology that is hack-proof.

“The computer companies that are involved, the manufacturers that are
involved, bring forward a technology and I will show you that it's
penetrable,” said Chalk. “I'll do it on national TV, I'll do it
anywhere. But I can guarantee you 100% that there is nothing out there
today – nothing – that can't be penetrated.”

Chalk's strong words come amidst increasing reports of the smart grid's
fatal insecurities, even from the governments and energy companies who
are forcing their hand with the smart program. “Every endpoint [meter]
is a new potential threat vector,” according to Doug Powell, manager,
SMI Security, Privacy & Safety, for Canadian utility BC Hydro.

And in an interview with EnergyNow.com, former CIA Director James
Woolsey was also highly critical of energy policy makers, whose plans
received multi-billion dollar funding as part of the Economic Stimulus
Act of 2008. “The so-called 'smart grid' that is as vulnerable as what
we've got now is not smart at all,” said Woolsey. “It's a really, really
stupid grid.”

But there's more. In an audit released in January, the US Inspector
General Gregory Friedman was also highly critical. “Without a formal
risk assessment and associated mitigation strategy, threats and
weaknesses may go unidentified and expose the ... systems to an
unacceptable level of risk,” Friedman wrote.

Energy officials knew of these weaknesses but approved plans for the
projects anyway, auditors said. “The initial weaknesses had not always
been fully addressed, and did not include a number of security practices
commonly recommended for federal government and industry systems.”

And security is not the only technologically-based obstacle faced by
smart grid proponents. In March, alarm bells were rung following current
CIA Director David Patraeus' confirmation that governments will use
wireless smart appliances to spy on citizens. “Items of interest will be
located, identified, monitored, and remotely controlled through
technologies such as radio-frequency identification, sensor networks,
tiny embedded servers, and energy harvesters,” Patraeus said at a
meeting of In-Q-Tel, the CIA's venture capital firm. He added that this
will prompt a rethink of “our notions of identity and secrecy.”

With strong criticism to the smart grid now coming from many directions,
energy corporations and governments now have the challenge to explain to
an increasingly unapproving public why they continue to fast-track smart
grid installations.

Citizen groups and organizations throughout the US, Canada and Europe
have launched legal actions to stop the installation of smart meters.
They cite issues such as cost increases, health risks, privacy concerns,
grid vulnerability and the lack of democratic process. In Chalk's home
province of British Columbia, Citizens for Safe Technology (www.citizensforsafetechnology.org)
and the BC Coalition to Stop Smart Meters are leading a growing
challenge.

Options for opting out of the smart metering program have been announced
in markets including California, Maine, Vermont, Louisiana, Michigan,
Connecticut, Quebec, the UK and the Netherlands. In the US, several
regions including the counties of Santa Cruz and Marin are enforcing
outright moratoriums.

“Unless we wake up and realize what we're doing, there is 100% certainty
of total catastrophic failure of the entire power infrastructure within
3 years,” said Chalk. “This could actually be worse than a nuclear war,
because it would happen everywhere. How governments and utilities are
blindly merging the power grid with the Internet, and effectively
without any protection, is insanity at its finest.”

The full video interview with David Chalk can be seen on www.thepowerfilm.org.
The feature film documentary 'Take Back Your Power', which critically
examines the smart grid program, will be released online this spring.